The best fish I've ever had was from Pecks - Wednesday Market, Beverley - back in the 60's. Always haddock, always with the skin on. Not the current shop, but the one that was next to the old car garage.
OK. Bones. I've had fish with skin on in the distant past, and I vaguely recall it always being associated with bones.
Is that just me? Personally, I find a bone in my fish, it's going in the bin. Totally removes any enjoyment for me.
That's why I now prefer skinless as it generally means no chance of choking to death on a fish bone.
There's no bones in the skin of a fish.![]()
****in hell, really? Thanks Captain Obvious.
If the skin is still on, there's more likely to be bones in the fish was my experience.

You're not allowed to use newspaper at all nowadays, though some places use that fake newspaper print wrapping paper.
Almost all chippies use beef dripping, a vegetarian friend of mine went checking lots of them and it was only really the Chinese places used vegetable oil to fry in.
I tell you what, I dont half fancy fish and chips now.
Haddock, no skin, obvs.
Hang on I've just realised, you lot think Cod and Haddock are different breeds of fish, you should know that Haddock is the female and Cod is the male, take a look at the pictures they look nearly identical, dear oh dear
I remember, in days past, London chippies sold 'Rock' (Rock Salmon). wtf is/was that?
Without wanting to get too bogged down in technical talk, why do cod gets worms and haddock dont?
To me the king of all the seafood is crab, be it Cromer, King crab legs or soft shell, beats lobster every day
Haddock do get worms. They get the same worms that cod get.
ESSEX GULL
Maybe I shouldve worded it better then. Why do we hear about cod worms but we dont hear about haddock worms?
Maybe I shouldve worded it better then. Why do we hear about cod worms but we dont hear about haddock worms?
Haddock has 'less' worms overall (although an individual fish can be infested) due to it being a deeper-dwelling fish and so further out in the ocean, where they're less common, but they still get the same worms - the famous 'worm' is actually a seal worm, which all fish get when they eat seal faeces. If you want to eat haddock/cod with the lowest chance of worms, eat Icelandic frozen - deeper ocean so less worms and the freezing kills them.
It's bad publicity really. Most fish have parasites, as does all wild-catch meat. Lowest levels of parasites on a fish will be in farmed salmon - from Norway, Faroes or Scotland, but even then you'll be eating sea-lice - highest levels for many years in 2014.
If cooked properly, there's no harm at all.
ESSEX GULL